
'P****d' Rory McIlroy breaks cover after silence since PGA Championship humbling
Rory McIlroy has broken cover nearly a month after his humbling performance at the PGA Championship, getting ready for the RBC Canadian Open at the driving range.
The Northern Irishman had not been seen publicly since his tied-for-47th place finish at Quail Hollow, a month after his Masters triumph, which broke his major-less streak of over a decade.
McIlroy was in the Greater Toronto area on Wednesday ahead of this week's event, practicing his drives before speaking with the media.
The 36-year-old did not speak with the media after each round of the PGA Championship, with a leak of his driver being tested as part of a normal procedure after the second round in North Carolina.
While the procedure is normal, it being publicized is not, with it being the first-such leak since 2019. McIlroy detailed his thought process, including being tight-lipped on behalf of world No 1 Scottie Scheffler.
'Yeah, look, the PGA was a bit of a weird week. I didn't play well. I didn't play well the first day, so I wanted to go practice, so that was fine,' McIlroy said Wednesday. 'Second day we finished late. I wanted to go back and see Poppy before she went to bed. The driver news broke. I didn't really want to speak on that.'
Rory's back. pic.twitter.com/QgVc1LgnA9
— Adam Stanley (@adam_stanley) June 4, 2025
'Saturday I was supposed to tee off at 8:20 in the morning. I didn't tee off until almost 2:00 in the afternoon, another late finish, was just tired, wanted to go home. Then Sunday, I just wanted to get on the plane and go back to Florida.'
'Yeah, look, and also the driver stuff, there was… I was a little p****d off because I knew that Scottie's driver had failed on Monday, but my name was the one that was leaked. It was supposed to stay confidential. Two members of the media were the ones that leaked it.'
'Again, I didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted, either, because there's a lot of people that - I'm trying to protect Scottie. I don't want to mention his name. I'm trying to protect TaylorMade. I'm trying to protect the USGA, PGA of America, myself. I just didn't want to get up there and say something that I regretted.'
'With Scottie's stuff, that's not my information to share. I knew that that had happened, but that's not on me to share that, and I felt that process is supposed to be kept confidential, and it wasn't for whatever reason. That's why I was pretty annoyed at that. From a responsibility standpoint, look, I understand, but if we all wanted to, we could all bypass you guys and we could just go on this and we could go on social media and we could talk about our round and do it our own way.'
'I think there should be an understanding that this is a two-way street, and as much as we need to speak to you guys, we're sort of - like we understand the benefit that comes from you being here and giving us the platform and everything else. So I understand that.'
'But again, I've been beating this drum for a long time. If they want to make it mandatory, that's fine, but in our rules it says that it's not, and until the day that that's maybe written into the regulations, you're going to have guys skip from time to time, and that's well within our rights.'
At last year's Canadian Open, McIlroy's strong final round was not enough to win the event after beginning Sunday seven strokes behind the leader.
Two months removed from McIlroy's joyous win at Augusta National, he'll try to win another event and move past the driver leak.
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